Visit or Membership to Morrison Natural History Museum (Up to 53% Off). Four Options Available.

Morrison

In a Nutshell

Visit or join a paleontology museum whose exhibits include remains from the first stegosaurus ever found and a T. rex skull you can touch

The Fine Print

Promotional value expires 180 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires.Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Limit 1 per visit. Valid only for option purchased. Must activate by expiration date on your Groupon, membership expires 12 months from activation date. New members only or those who have not been active in past.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Morrison Natural History Museum

Learning about science in a museum is safer than experiencing it firsthand by ingesting a beaker or reanimating a cherished family parakeet. Bring science to life with this Groupon.

Choose from Four Options

$8 for admission for two (up to a $16 value)

$15 for admission for four (up to a $32 value)

$25 for one household membership (a $50 value)

$35 for one unlimited membership (a $75 value)

Both memberships include 10% discounts on gift shop items, private events, and special events, as well as a subscription to the museum’s electronic newsletter. Household members receive free admission for individuals in their household, while unlimited members can bring guests who are not members of their immediate family.

Morrison Natural History Museum

Chances are a Tyrannosaurus would bite if you tried to pet it. Thankfully, that's not the case at Morrison Natural History Museum, where a Tyrannosaurus skull is one of many safe fossils that visitors are encouraged to touch. The paleontology museum's 3,000 square feet of exhibition space is full of other dino bones discovered in Colorado, from the first stegosaurus fossils to the tracks of an infant dinosaur. A peek into the museum's Paleo Lab reveals scientists conducting research in real time, while trips to the dig pit let kids experience the rush of unearthing their own fossils.

Not everything at the Morrison is about fossils. Among the Ice Age exhibit's bones of saber-toothed cats, for instance, glass displays teem with live reptiles, amphibians, and a wooly mammoth stretching after a 7,000-year nap. Educational programs likewise blend dinosaur-focused activities and interactions with live creatures, such as birthday parties that include the chance to pet a live snake.